FAIR *WITH am* BRIEF SHOWER 1Mw 43UU -A6V Ar :43 a tt POSTWAR CONFERENCE See Bottom of Page VOL. LV., No. 16-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Inside Story of Medley PrisonBreak Revealed 1,000-Plane Raid Damages Six Jap Ships * * * * * * * * * * Dethmers Southern Reports Escaped Convict Called Michigan State Prison 'Playhouse' Far East Alr Force Attacks Shanghai Area By The Associated Press LANSING, July 24-Attorney General John R. Dethmers, in the second chapter of his expose of the State Prison of Southern Michigan, reported today that Joseph D. Medley, escaped convict under sentence of death in Washington, D. C., described the "world's biggest prison" as a "damned playhouse." Dethmers revealed the inside story of Medley's escape from the big peni- tentiary today, close on the heels of a previous report that a four-month 'investigation showed vice, corruption, Reynaud Tells Of 1940 Plot To Buy Off Italy Churchill Balked Plan, Petain Jury Is Told By The Associated Press PARIS, July 24-Under scorching cross-examination at the treason trial of Marshal Henri Philippe Pe- tain, former French Premier Paul Reynaud revealed the secret fact to- day that in May, 1940, France and Britain considered buying off Musso- lini's entry into the war by giving Italy territorial rights in Africa. Reynaud said he made the suggest- ion to Britain himself, although he opposed the plan. The plans were scuttled, he said, by the opposition of Prime Minister Churchill of Brit- ain. Daladier Testifies World figures by the dozen, and the hidden history of France's collapse and her armistice negotiations with Germany, were dragged into the lime- light as former Premier Edouard Daladier joined Reynaud in testify- ing against Petain on the second day of the aged marshal's historic trial. The 89-year-old former chief of the Vichy state, charged with intelligence with Germany and with plotting against the security of France, heard Reynaud, the last premier of the French Third Republic: 1. Accuse King Leopold of the Bel- gians with treason; Petain Opposed Rearmament in 1934 2. Assert Petain had obstructed the rearmament of France as far back as 1934; 3. Declare that the late President Roosevelt sentan "extremely strong- worded" telegram to Petain, saying France would lose America's friend- ship if she dealt with the Nazis; 4. Say that a French-British union, proposed by Churchill in France's last days, was "an ideal which some day must be realized. Bell Telephone Plans Outlined Big Postwar Project To Cost 150 Million Ben R. Marsh, vice-president of the Michigan Bell Telephone Co., speaking at the annual University Guidance and Placement Conference yesterday outlinedthe telephonecor- pany's five-year postwar plan. The project, tentatively scheduled to begin December, 1945, will cost an estimated $150,000,000 and includes a 30 per cent increase in postwar employment over normal peacetime quotas. Normal number of Michigan Bell -employes is between 14 and 15 thousand. More Phones, Quicker Service After the new program has been set up, Michigan will have 400,000 more phones, quicker, and more effi- cient inter-city service, Marsh dis- closed. Also featured on the conference program was William O'Neil, director of the Chicago Sun Yanks Service who called for more efficient veteran counseling facilities in institutions of higher education. "There will be a great struggle be- tween World War II veterans and higher educational institutions if these institutions do not revise their overall programs without lowering standards," he said. Vets Want Special Training "Men. and women now receiving discharges from the armed forces want training for a specific job, not a broad general education," he de- clared. "There must be some avenue for counseling the veteran at this high level," O'Neil stated. "Too many agencies are attempting to do some- thing to the veteran, instead of for the veteran. Chairman for the Conference was Dr. T. Luther Purdom, director of the University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, who anla hrif - nn .,C n~yTa - n gambling liquor and favoritism were rampant within the prison walls and that some inmates were permitted the "solace" of women visitors or were allowed to go outside the prison to visit prostitutes. Medley Obtains Pass Dethmers gave newsmen the text of a statement by Lieut. Howard Freeland of the prison guard staff that Medley obtained the signature of Assistant Deputy Warden D. C. Pettit for a pass permitting him to leave the prison at 6 a. m. Nov. 27, 1944, explaining he wished to secure literature for the prison war bond drive. Dethmers noted that the war bond office in Jackson did not open until 9 a. m. (Medley has been sentenced in Calhoun County to 30 to 60 years in 1934 for robbery armed, after kidnap- ping and robbing a Marshall busi- ness man of $10,000.) Fails to Return Freeland, according to Dethmers, said he let Medley out in downtown Jackson without aguard, expecting to pick him up again that night. When Medley failed to return, the report said, Poirier and Pettit searched the city for him. Dethmers said "it is interesting to note the search was made in beer taverns and houses of prostitution." Interviewed in the District of Columbia jail by Capt. Harold Mul- bar of the' State Police, Medley, ac- cording to Dethmers contended "it was not an escape, he could have left any time he wanted to, that he not only had the money for the bonds in his possession but another consider- able sum of money which he had col- lected from fellow inmates inside the falls." BigThree Await Election Results POTSDAM, July 24-0"I)-The Big Three Conference will pause tempor- arily tomorrow while British leaders go home to learn election results and discover who shall speak finally for Britain in the history-charting ne- gotiations. Prime Minister Churchill, Foreign Secretary Eden, and Clement Atlee, Labor Party leader, will fly to Lon- don for Thursday's announcement of the July 7 balloting. On Friday at the earliest the vic- tor is expected back -either Church- ill, the Conservative Party head, with Eden still his foreign expert, or At- lee with a new foreign secretary of his own choosing. Sink 3 Ships; I Wreck Smaller Craft Monday By TheAssociated Press MANILA, Wednesday, July 25- More than 300 Far East Air Force bombors and fighters gave the Shang- hai area one of its heaviest air at- tacks Monday, sinking three ships, probably sinking 10 and wrecking numerous small craft, General Mac- Arthur announced in today's com- munique. Planes Caught on Ground MacArthur said one destroyer, one 3,000-ton freighter and a smaller freighter were. sunk. Probably sunk were a destroyer escort, two submar- ine chasers, a 1,000-ton transport and six freighters. An estimated 45 planes were caught on the ground and destroyed or seriously damaged 'at Kingwan, Tachang and Tinghai airfields, where the attackers caused large fires and exlosions. Search planes ranging over coast- al sectors bombed Fusan airdrome in Korea, scored hits on a munitions dump at Amoy, causing large explo- sions, and destroyed a river boat near Saigon, French Indo-China. Attack Miho, Yonago Airfields Returning to Japanese skies after a typhoon enforced absence of a few days, patrol bombers of the Far East Air Forces attacked Miho and Yona- go airfields on southern Honshu at night. They caused large fires and explo- sions. which lighted the entire area. 0 300=_ - ST A T U T E M ILES-M u o a - USSRMuroran - MANCHURIA idvosk KarnHakodate HOKKAIDO: Masuda- :-Matsushima Koriyama t = - -Hitachi Sukeg awa _ JAPAN Niigta% C hoshi " Kawasaki -Yokosuka° KOREA Hiatsuka Fukui Okazaki Kuwana- -: Yokkaich- Amnagasaki Shimotsui Otake * TOKYO Tokuyama ®- -- ' Kudama4. u i Oita HONSHU 9 Miyazaki* iaiKagoshima =SHIKOKU KYUSHU 8B Map locates cities on the Japanese home islands hit recently by air and sea attacks. Bomb Burst symbols represent shelling by Allied Naval Forces. All targets were hit from the air. Strausbourg University Placed Under Consideration for Adoption Carrier-Based Craft Leave Ships In Flames at Great Naval Base By The Associated Press GUAM, Wednesday, July 25-Tuesday's 1,000-plane carrier raid on Japan's great Naval base damaged six warships, including two battle- ships, one carrier and three cruisers, Admiral Chester Nimitz announced today. The battleships were identified as the ISE class-heavy battleships con- verted into aircraft carriers by conversion of the after structure into a small flight dec%. * * * EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the third in a series of articles on foreign universities under consideration for adoption. Infor- mation for this article was supplied by the World Student Service Fund. Before the war about 2.500 French and 880 foreign students attended SOIC To Hold Adoption Dance; Foreign University To Be Chosen Tickets are now on sale at the League and the Union for the "Adop- tion Dance" to be held from 9 p. m. to midnight EWT(8 to 11 p.m. CWT) Saturday in the ballroom of the Union. Entire proceeds of the dance will be used to send supplies to a foreign university damaged or destroyed dur- ing the var. Announcement of the university chosen at the campus elec- tion Friday will be made at the dance. Chaperones for the evening will be Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hanau, Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Stevens, Dr. and Mrs. Werner Striedieck, and Prof. and Mrs. Carlton F. Wells. The Student Organization for In- ternational Cooperation, sponsor of, the dance and the adoption, has in- vited as patrons President and Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven, Dean Joseph A. Bursley, Dean and Mrs. Hayward Keniston, Dean Alice M. Lloyd, Dean and Mrs. Walter B. Rea and Dean and Mrs. Erich A. Walter. * * * The slate of universities under con- sideration for adoption includes the Universities of Athens, Kiev, Philip- pines, Strasbourg, Tsing Hua and Warsaw. Students will ' choose from among these at a campus election Friday. Also to be selected Friday are three representatives to the Engineering Council and three Union vice-presi- dents. Polling places will be open from 8:45 a. m. to 2:15 p. m. EWT (7:45 a. m. to 1:15 p. m. CWT) at the en- gineering arch, the diagonal and in between the Romance Language Building and Tappan Hall. the University of Strasbourg in Al- sace-Lorraine. Ranking second in France, the University is composed of seven "fac- ulties," Catholic and Protestant, The- ology, Law, Medicine, Sciences, Lib- eral Arts and Pharmacy. The School of Medicine is closely associated with the Civic Hospital and forms "a city within a city." A University library of more than a million volumes is classed in France second only to the National Library and the libraries of the University of Paris. When the Germans occupied the province, they deported several hun- dred students for forced labor. Some students were hurt; others joined the Resistance Movement. The Univer- sity evacuated to Claremont Ferrand and the remaining students contin- ued their education. The University will return to Strasbourg in 'October, although some of its buildings have been plun- dered and destroyed. In addition to the material re- building, there is a psycshological problem to be met. During the oc- cupation, a complete "Germaniza- tion" was forced on the Alsatians. The French language was forbidden and French institutions were abol- ished. Cruisers Left Burning The aircraft carrier was not iden- tified in Nimitz' communique. Two of the damaged cruisers were heavies: the third light. Nimitz said the Navy Cruiser Tone and the light cruiser Oyodo were left "badly burning." The heavy cruiser Aoba, both battleships and a large aircraft carrier were reported "dam- aged," without elaboration. Cruisers and destroyers of the thirdc fleet bombarded Kushimoto seaplane base, Shionomisaki airfield, a radio station and other military installa-t tions in the vicinity of the town ofr Kushimoto, on the southwestern tip of Honshu, early this morning. r Approach Shore To Bombarde Approaching shore for the bom- bardment, the force, underscom- mand of Rear Adm. J. C. Jones, Jr.,E USN, sank a small vessel, probably a picket boat on the lookout forr American ships. The shelling marked the eighth dayf in the last 15 in which American Fleet1 units, sometimes supported by the British, have bombarded or bombedr the Japanese homeland. Nimitz disclosed that British air-, craft also participated in yesterday'st carrier strike, which attacked mer- chant as well as combatant shipping in the inland sea, airfield installations from which Kamikaze raids were launched during the Okinawa cam- paign, and other military targets. Huntley Speaks About Japanese At Grad Council1 The question, "Who Are the Japa- nese?" was left unanswered last night by Prof. F. L. Huntley, lecturer in Area at the Civil Affairs Training School in a speech before members of the Graduate Council. Prof. Huntley indicated ways in which Americans should guide their thinking about the Japanese and pointed out common pitfalls in our judgment of them. "We must get rid of stereotypes," Prof. Huntley declared, "because they are based upon insufficient evidence, because they may be applied to many different peoples, because our atti- tudes toward the Japanese change as history changes and because our ap- plication of stereotypes often leads to psychological conclusions about ourselves." "A second error," the Japanese analyst said, "is the error of think- ing that the Japanese are human and therefore very much like our- selves if you take the trouble to understand them." He urged that we must try to understand why the Japanese are different from our- selves. Prof. Huntley suggested two ave- nues of approach to an understand- ing of the Japanese; one, through the social sciences, and another, through the humanities. Through the social sciences, which include psychiatry, anthropology and social psychology, he explained, the Japanese society is a laboratory in which the scientist can examine ac- tual materiels. Through the human- ities, such as history, politics, religion, language and literature, Prof. Hunt- ley asserted, one studies, not society, but the culture which is the product of society. Air Command In Pacific Sees Triple Change By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 24 - The Army today announced a triple change in Pacific Air Commands to help blast Japan with a greater bomb tonnage than ever rained on Ger- many. Lt. Gen. Ira C. Eaker, Deputy Com- mander of Army Air Forces, announc- ed that: LeMay Commands 20th 1. May. Gen. Curtis E. Lemay, vet- eran of the B-29 strikes against Japan, has been promoted from com- mand of the 20th Air Force to <.be Chief of Staff to General Carl Spaatz, Commander of Strategic Army"Air Forces. 2. Lt. Gen. Nathan F. Twining, native of Monroe, Wisc., will be head of the 20th Air Force succeeding Le- May. Twining formerly commanded the big 15th Air Force in Africa and Italy. Brooks Heads 11th 3. Major General John B. Brooks, will be commanding general of -the 11th Army Air Force. Attached, to Naval forces under Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, the 11th has re- cently been active in attacks against Paramushiro and the Kuriles. Eaker disclosed the Army has ca- celled all remaining orders for pro- duction of the B17 Flying Foreress, having a sufficient fleet of this type of bomber for the Pacific war. Sturtevant To Speak Today Greek Language Will Be Lecture Subject Language scholars' interest in Greek, not solely as the speech of an ancient civilization, but also as a tongue with a long and varied history, still spoken by millions, will be re- flected when Dr. Edgar H. Sturte- vant, professor emeritus of linguis- tics at Yale University, speaks on "Three Thousand Years of Greek" on the Linguistic Institute's series of special lectures at 7:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) today in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Dr. Sturtevant 'has taught Latin, Greek, and linguistics at Indiana, Missouri, Columbia, and Yale, and is the author of various books and arti- cles. One of his books, "The Pro- nunciation of Latin and Greek," a second edition of which was pub- lished in 1940, is recognized by lin- guistic scholars as the standard work on its subject. Has Written About Hittite He has also published a grammar, a dictionary, and numerous articles on Hittite, a language spoken in Asia Minor more than three thousand years ago. Members of the Institute, meeting last night, heard Dr. Sturtevant and Dr. Franklin Edgerton, professor of Sanskrit at Yale and in the Institute, present opposite views on a question of methods in comparative philology. Edgerton Speaks Dr. Edgerton, speaking on "Limi- tations and Dangers of the Compara- tive Method," pointed out that the earliest workers to compare a group of related languages would discover the most obvious instances of words that these tongues have in common, making it necessary for later work- ers to use more exact methods if they are to add with certainty to the list of related words. He protested especially against the practice of tak- POSTWAR CONFERENCE CONTINES: Ruthven, Titiev Speak on Racial, Educational Problems President Alexander G. Ruthven and Prof. Mischa Titiev of the an- thropology department will speak in the Conference on the United States in the Postwar World today. "Problems of Educational Cooperation" will be discussed by President Ruthven at 8:15 p. m. EWT (7:15 p. m. CWT) today in Rackham Amphi- theatre. Prof. Louis A. Hopkins, Director of the Summer Session, will intro- duce President Ruthven. Titiev To Speak "The Problem of Inter-racial Cooperation" will be analyzed by Prof. Titiev at 4:10 p. m. EWT (3:10 p. m. CWT) today at Rackham Amphi- theatre. Prof. Titiev has been on leave from the University with the Office of Strategic Services, for which he has been working in Asia until this semester. Ruthven has been President of the University since 1929, before which he had been Dean of the Administration. Awarded the Blue Cordon of the Order of the Brilliant Jade in 1938, President Ruthven has also * * * * * * Two Week Conference oii U.* been awarded membership in Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi. He is a fellow A. A. A. S. in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a member of the American Academy of Science, Arts and Letters, of which he was president, 1913-15; the American Philosophical Society and the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists. Administrators Listed The Administrative Offices of the Conference are President Ruthven; Prof. James P. Adams, Provost; Prof. Louis A. Hopkins, Director of the Summer Session; and Prof. Clarence S. Yoakum, Dean of the graduate school. The Administrative Committee consists of Prof. Arthur E. R. Boak of the history department; Prof. Robert B. Hall of the geography depart- ment, chairman; Prof. Hopkins; Dean Hayward Keniston of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts; Prof. I. L. Sharfman, chairman of 'the economics department; and Prof. William B. Wilcox of the history department, secretary. * * * * * * S.i Postwar World Begins Brown Criticizes Immigration Policy Prof. Everett Brown, chairman of the University political science de- partment, Monday opened the con- ference on "The United States in the Postwar World," strongly criticizing the immigration policy of this na- tion over the past half-century. piscussing "Patterns of Political Thought-National or International?", Prnf_ Brnn dlared ."Norn ca n n Viner Stresses U. S. Econom"ic Reversal "The reversal of the traditional American role so that she now in- tends to become the leader and pioneer in international economic co- operation is the most important fa- vorable prospect for cooperation in the post "war world," stated Jacob Viner, professor of economics, at the University of Chicago. Addressing the Conference on the United States in the Postwar World last night, on the subject Dr. Baxter Reviews U. S. Military Needs Declaring that after the war the United States will have to maintain a great Navy and much stronger land and air force than we had hitherto kept in time of peace, Dr. James P. Baxter, III, President of Williams College told a Rackham Auditorium audience Monday night that we should determine our postwar mili- tary needs before adopting compul- sory military conscription. As we can not safely assume. he Arabs Think Russia Only Hope-Hopkins Many young Arabs now look only to Russia to carry out the promise of an independent Arab state made by the Allies at the close of the World War, Prof. Clark Hopkins told a Rackham Amphitheatre audience yes- terday afternoon. Of the other powers, he declared, only the United States made a sin- cere effort to study Arabian problems. Contrary to the recommendations of l i s f CAMPUS EVENTS Today Members of the Veterans Organization will meet at 7:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) in Lane Hall. Today Prof. Mischa Titiev of the anthropology department will speak at the Confer- ence on U. S. in the Post- war World on "The Prob- l em o f Tnt4'n.as . rnn _